USA TODAY International Edition
South Korea: North willing to talk to U.S.
President Moon urges better relations
North Korea is willing to hold talks with the United States on a range of issues including Pyongyang’s nuclear development program, a ranking North Korean official told South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
Kim Yong Chol, a senior official of the North’s ruling Worker’s Party in charge of inter-Korean relations, made the remarks at a meeting Sunday with Moon in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the host city for the 2018 Winter Olympic Games. Moon’s presidential office announced the overture in a statement picked up by South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.
Kim, the former North Korean spy chief, was sitting just a few feet away from Ivanka Trump, President Trump’s daughter, at the closing ceremony Sunday, but the two did not interact. Ivanka Trump, who was leading the U.S. delegation, briefed Moon on the latest set of sanctions and delivered a message from her father after she arrived in Seoul on Friday for her four-day visit.
The North Korean attaché, in South Korea for the end of the Olympics, is a controversial character in the South, suspected by Seoul of having masterminded two attacks in 2010 that killed 50 South Koreans.
Moon spokesman Kim Eui-kyeom said the president urged that U.S.-North Korea talks “be held at an early date ... for an improvement in the South-North Korea relationship and the fundamental resolution of Korean Peninsula issues.”
“The North Korean delegation, too, agreed that North Korea-U.S. relations must develop along with the South-North Korea relationship,” Kim Eui-kyeom said.
Harry Kazianis, director of defense studies at the Washington-based think tank Center for the National Interest, expressed skepticism at the North’s outreach. “To put it simply — will North Korea talk nukes or is (leader) Kim Jong Un just looking to buy more time?” Kazianis told USA TODAY. “We will find out soon enough.”
A sincere offer of talks would provide a rare step toward diplomacy after years of missile and nuclear tests and direct threats of war from Pyongyang — and from Washington. Moon won election last year after promising to engage North Korea in an effort to ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula. The two countries held talks in January, the first such engagement in two years. South Korea agreed to host North Korean athletes, musicians, cheerleaders and a high-level delegation at the Olympics.